Sunday, 21 October 2012

“The Lotus Eater”: An analysis

by Sommerset Maugham

Background

• Lotus eater – a person who lives an idle,
comfortable life, does not think/care very much about anything.

• Setting - On the beautiful island of Capri, Italy.
The places mentioned are the small, comfortable cottage Wilson lives in before
the age of 60 as well as the woodshed where he lives after the age of 60. The
time of the story is in the early 1900’s.

• Point of view – The story is narrated from the first
person point of view.

General summary

The Lotus Eater tells of a man who plans to live a happy life
to a certain period of time, but faces difficulties when things do not work out
the way he wants them to be.

Sequence of events (Traditional Plot)

Rising actions

Visits Capri for the first time

Falls in love with Capri

Makes decision to live on Capri

Sells house and buys annuity for 25 years

Lives happily for 25 years

Runs out of money

Landlord asks to leave cottage

Climax

Tries to kill himself

Falling actions

Does not dies

Lives in woodshed

Looks after goats and chickens

Becomes a misfit

Dies six years after he tries to kill himself

Sequence of events – Textual evidence

Before Thomas Wilson is 60:

“After my first visit here I went back to London. I was a
bank manager.”

“I was on holiday in Italy at the time. I took a boat from
Naples to visit Capri for a few days.”

“I fell in love with this island the first moment I saw it.”

“I had no family. I had no other relations and no close
friends.”

“I decided that I was going to love here for the rest of my
life.”

“But I did not decide in a hurry. I had to be sure that I
was not making a terrible mistake.”

“I decided I was going to live a happy life before I die.”

“I had some savings and I sold my house in London. With this
money, I bought an annuity for 25 years.”

“He lived in a small cottage. I found this cottage when I
first came back.”

After Thomas Wilson is 60:

“It was thirteen years before I went back to Capri again.”

“When he reached the age of sixty, the money was finished.”

“He lived like this for over a year.”

“In the end, the owner of the cottage told him he had to
leave unless he paid the rent.”

“That night, he tried to kill himself.”

“He was very ill, but was still alive.”

“Assunta helped him. She and her husband let him live in the
woodshed behind their house. They gave him food and he looks after their goats
and chickens.”

“It’s not very comfortable in the woodshed. Burning hot in
the summer and freezing cold in the winter.”

“What a terrible way to live. He was like a wild animal.”

“He had lived for six years in that woodshed. Wilson died
last year.”

Character Analysis

Thomas Wilson

The friend

Assunta

The narrator

Name

Description

Textual evidence
(examples)

1. Thomas Wilson

Before the age of 60:

•about 50 years
old with grey hair, and face burnt brown by the sun,

•careful person,
does not make decisions in a hurry,

•idealistic,

•a loner,

•likes to meet
people,

•lazy.

•“The man was
about fifty and he was dressed in old clothes. He had grey hair and his face
was burnt brown by the sun.”

•“But I did not
decide in a hurry. I had to be sure that I was not making a terrible mistake”

•“I decided I was
going to live a happy

•“I had no family…
. I had no other relations and no close friends.”

•“He was happy to
be by himself…”

“…he also enjoyed meeting people from time to time.”

•“For a long time,
Wilson has lived an easy life”

After the age of 60:

•indecisive

•does not
recognise friends

•may have become
insane

• like a wild
animal

• “When the time came to make a decision, he was unable to
do anything.”

• “He didn’t know who I was.”

• “Perhaps his mind was damaged by the smoke.”

•“He was like a
wild animal.”

2. The friend

•friendly

•concerned

•kind and generous

•“My friend
had invited him to come and have dinner with us.”

•“I went to visit
him in hospital.”

“I’ve tried to speak to him.”

•“I gave her some
money so that she can buy some tobacco for him.”

3. Assunta

• hardworking

•helpful

•kind, considerate
and sympathetic

• “She cleans the rooms and she cooks my meals.”

•“They (Assunta
and her husband) took him to the hospital….”

•“Assunta helped
him.”

“She and her husband let him live in the woodshed behind
their house.”

4. The narrator

•inquisitive

•practical

•“What about your
family?”

“But what about your work?”

“And you have no other regrets?”

•“But what about
money? Did you have money to leave work and come here?”

Themes

Man’s quest for happiness

Thomas Wilson wants to live a happy life and goes through
the trouble of preparing himself financially until he is sixty years old. When
he is 60, he realises that he is incapable of taking his own life. He is then
forced out of his home to live on the charity of others and lives in a
deplorable state. He becomes a misfit in contemporary society. Wilson does not
find happiness but has to pay a very high price for it during the last few
years of his life.

Man proposes, God disposes

Man has only limited control over his destiny. Thomas Wilson
plans out meticulously to ensure that he leads a happy life until the age of 60
after which he intends to kill himself (commit suicide). When he evicted from
his cottage a year later, only then he made a futile attempt to commit suicide.
In spite of all the trouble that Wilson takes to make sure that his life turns
out the way he wants it to be, he has no control over his fate and destiny.

Literary Techniques – Some examples

Techniques

Textual reference

1. Foreshadow (hints at the notion of suicide and
death)

“Because he’s going to kill himself”

“He’s going to die when he’s sixty.”

“When his money is finished, he’s going to kill himself.”

“That will be the end.”

But I understood what he planned to do.

“But it was his own life and he could do what he likes
with it.”

“It’s rather a sad story.”

“But he was not the same.”

2. Irony

Wilson wants to escape from routine work but the
alternative life he chooses for himself is just as mundane.

“If I stayed working at the bank, I would go on doing the
same thing day after day, years after years.”

“They gave him food and he looks after their goats and
their chickens.”

3. Contrast

“He lived in a small cottage” (refers to cosy, comfortable
and beautiful cottage).

“She and her husband let him live in the woodshed behind
their house.” (refers to an uncomfortable, crude and dilapidated building).

“He was happy to be by himself, but he also enjoyed
meeting people from time to time.”

“He runs away whenever I go near him.”

“He played some music by Beethoven.”(shows a refined man)

“He was like a wild animal.” (shows an uncivilised man)

4. Symbol

“moon”, “moonlight” may symbolize calmness, tranquility,
peacefulness. From a distance the moon looks beautiful but in reality it is
quite harsh. The moon also symbolizes irrationality (lunar – lunacy).

“On my last night, I went for a walk to see the Bay of
Naples by moonlight. It was a full moon that night – the same as it is now.
And it was on that walk in the moonlight that I made my decision.”

“It had been a full moon the night before. Wilson had died
in the moonlight.”

5. Images

“He has grey hair and his face was burnt brown by the sun.”

“I could see the red smoke coming from the top of the
Vesuvius.”

Next morning, I went swimming in the bright, clear water.

The crowd of people following the procession were
laughing, dancing and singing.